Friday, July 13, 2007

«Tintin au Congo» a été jugé raciste

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Cette image grâce au Figaro
LE FIGARO: L’album «Tintin au Congo» a été jugé raciste par la commission britannique pour l'égalité raciale.

Désormais, pour lire «Tintin au Congo» outre-Manche, il faudra avoir plus de 18 ans. Le groupe britannique Borders, qui édite en Angleterre les aventures du reporter inventé par Hergé, vient de décider de classer cet album dans la rubrique «BD adultes».

La raison : une décision de la commission pour l’égalité raciale (CRE), saisie par un avocat britannique, David Enright, qui est tombé par hasard sur l’album en faisant du shopping. Pour lui, «Tintin au Congo» suggère que les Africains sont de sous-humains, que ce sont des imbéciles, à moitié sauvages». Tintin interdit aux mineurs en Grande-Bretagne (suivant)

Mark Alexander
Lord Ahmed im Gespräch

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Photo of Lord Ahmed courtesy of Google Images
NZZ ONLINE: In Grossbritannien leben gut 1,8 Millionen Muslime, das sind drei Prozent der Bevölkerung. Im Zusammenhang mit den im Juni misslungenen Autobomben- Attentaten in London und Glasgow und den grossen Terroranschlägen von 2005 ist eine breite Debatte über die Integration der Muslime – und deren teilweise Radikalisierung – im Gange. Das Gespräch mit Lord Ahmed führten in London Reinhard Meier und Ulrich Meister.

Lord Ahmed, Sie sind als erster muslimischer Politiker ins britische Oberhaus ernannt worden. Ist das für Sie ein Zeichen des Fortschritts für die Integration der muslimischen Bevölkerung in die britische Gesellschaft?


Lord Ahmed: Es ist sicher eine Ehre für mich, als Mitglied auf Lebenszeit ins Oberhaus ernannt worden zu sein. Es zeigt die Grosszügigkeit der britischen Gesellschaft, Menschen aus anderen Kulturen und Religionen sowie verschiedenen sozialen Klassen zu integrieren. Als die Labour-Partei an die Macht kam, konnten auch Bürger aus der Arbeiterklasse ins Oberhaus einziehen, ich als einer der Jüngsten. Die Ernennung zeigte aber auch, was Muslime für Grossbritannien geleistet haben, unter anderem als Soldaten im Zweiten Weltkrieg und später in den fünfziger Jahren als Arbeiter in der Stahlindustrie. «Imame verstehen die britische Gesellschaft nicht»: Lord Ahmed im Gespräch (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Class Action Suit to Be Filed in Israel Against the German Government on Behalf of the Children of the Holocaust

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Photo from Dachau courtesy of Google Images
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: A class action suit is to be filed in Israel against the German government on behalf of the children of Holocaust survivors who are in urgent need of psychological treatment.

A class action suit is to be filed in Israel against the German government on behalf of the children of Holocaust survivors.

The lawsuit, which will be filed in Tel Aviv on Sunday, will demand that the German government pay for the psychological treatment of children of Holocaust survivors living in Israel (more...).

The suit is being filed by the Fisher Fund, an Israeli charity that helps Holocaust survivors, and will represent tens of thousands of Holocaust victims' children. The fund expects the number registered for the class action suit to soon reach 30,000 people, due to enormous media interest in Israel.

The suit is intended to benefit an estimated 15,000 children of survivors in Israel who are in need of psychological treatment as a result of being raised in dysfunctional homes. They suffer from depression, anxiety and other psychological disorders. Children of Holocaust Survivors to Sue Germany (more)

Mark Alexander
Islamic Banking and Finance

HSBC Amanah


Riyazi Farook



Mark Alexander
Battle for the Soul of Turkey

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Painting entitled ”Turkish Woman” courtesy of Google Images, from a commemorative exhibition, October 22 – November 14, 2004, by the Ukrainian Institute of America in collaboration with the ALEXIS GRITCHENKO Foundation
TIME: Only a few months ago, Utku Koseoglu would spend his evenings playing football or maybe downing an Efes beer or two with friends at a waterside nightclub in one of the trendier parts of Istanbul. His reading ran to thrillers like The Da Vinci Code. But these days, the 27-year-old lawyer is more likely to be found hunched over a conference table in a cramped and sweaty office in Istanbul's hectic Kadikoy district, toiling late into the summer night writing blogs, collecting Web clippings and organizing marches. When he finds time for a book, it's the writings of Turkey's revered founder Kemal Ataturk, not Dan Brown. "I could have been starting my career," he says with a wry smile. "Instead, I am doing this."

The reason for his conversion to political activism, he says, is that his country is facing the gravest threat to its secularist identity in more than 50 years. The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), led by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has links, he believes, to Islamic sects that are intent on undermining democracy and Turkey's treasured secularist principles. For the the sake of the nation, says Koseoglu, they must be defeated at the polls. "We want to expose the true face of the AKP and make sure no vote is wasted." The little outfit to which he belongs, formed a year ago under the title the Kemalist Politics Group, is one of scores that have emerged in in the run-up to parliamentary elections on July 22. In a rare expression of political will from a middle class that has traditionally seen scant need to get involved, these groups have organized dozens of marches that have brought millions onto the streets in cities across the nation. "Our strategies are long-term," says a friend of Koseoglu's, Demir Buyukozkan, 28, at a recent late-night session in Istanbul. "In the next generation, our goal is to be leaders of this country."

Unfortunately for these emboldened secularists, a great many young conservatives have precisely the same goal. Indeed, supporters of the AKP, which has dominated the Turkish parliament for the past five years, have been invigorated by the secularists' opposition. After the Turkish army, a stalwart (if frequently undemocratic) defender of the country's secular heritage, intervened in April to block the party's choice for President, the AKP vowed to leave the decision to the people by calling for early elections. (If the party wins a majority in the parliament, it aims to change the constitution to allow a direct presidential vote.) Hundreds of thousands of volunteers for the AKP are, like their secularist counterparts, pounding the pavement in 81 provinces to rally support. Turkey’s Great Divide (more) By Andrew Purvis, Istanbul

Mark Alexander
House of Representatives Votes for Troop Withdrawal in Iraq

BBC: The United States House of Representatives has voted in favour of pulling most combat troops out of Iraq by April next year.

The new legislation calls for the Pentagon to begin withdrawing combat troops within four months.

The vote comes despite President George W Bush's threat to veto any timetable.

Both the House and the Senate must pass separate legislation and then reconcile their two versions for a measure to be passed to the president.

Correspondents say the House of Representatives, controlled by the Democrats, is hoping to pressure the Senate to approve a similar timeline.

It is the third time this year the House has voted in favour of legislation to end US military involvement in Iraq. US House votes for troop pullout (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
US House wants troop pullout

Mark Alexander
”Al-Qaeda Better Positioned to Strike the West”

“Something I’ve said repeatedly . . . is we have to watch Europe because the growth of home-grown terrorism over there creates a vulnerability for those who might use Europe as a platform into the United States.” – Michael Chertoff

TIMESONLINE: US intelligence chiefs held a White House summit yesterday to discuss a classified report that concluded that al-Qaeda is now stronger than at any time since September 11, 2001.

Details of the five-page document, entitled “Al-Qaeda better positioned to strike the West”, were leaked amid growing signs that America is nervous about the prospect of another terrorist attack. There was particular concern that Europeans could be used to launch such operations.

Michael Chertoff, the Homeland Security Secretary, has spent days trying to play down comments that his “gut feeling” was that the US faced a heightened risk of attack this summer.

Yesterday a flight from Los Angeles to London was diverted to New York after a crew member became suspicious of one of the passengers, who had been seen bypassing security by travelling on an employee-only bus.

Mr Chertoff emphasised yesterday that “we don’t have any specific information about an imminent or near-term attack on the homeland”. However, The Times has been told that US and British intelligence services monitoring al-Qaeda networks have picked up “an increased level of chatter” in recent weeks. Al-Qaeda terror threat ‘at its highest since 9/11’ (more)

Mark Alexander
Musharraf Gets Tough on Muslim Terrorists

THE TELEGRAPH: President Pervez Musharraf pledged to combat Muslim extremists across Pakistan yesterday as furious crowds demonstrated against the storming of the Red Mosque and two suicide bomb attacks left six dead.

In a televised address to the nation, Gen Musharraf said that those inside the mosque and its adjacent madrassa, or Muslim college, were "terrorists" who directly threatened Pakistan's security. They had also tarnished Islam's reputation as a tolerant and peaceful religion.

"What do we as a nation want?" he asked. "What kind of Islam do these people represent? In the garb of Islamic teaching they have been training for terrorism. They prepared the madrassa as a fortress for war and housed other terrorists in there."

Gen Musharraf praised the army for wresting the mosque and its madrassa "from the hands of terrorists" and said: "I will not allow any madrassa to be used for extremism." Musharraf declares war on Muslim extremists (more) By David Blair

Mark Alexander
Gordon No Friend of Bush as He Starts to Distance His Government from US Foreign Policy

TIMESONLINE: Gordon Brown’s Government took another tentative step to distance itself from President Bush yesterday, as one of the Prime Minister’s chief lieutenants delivered a series of coded criticisms of American foreign policy.

Douglas Alexander, the International Development Secretary, used a speech in Washington last night to rebuke what many in Labour’s ranks regard as Mr Bush’s unilateralist and high-handed approach. Mr Alexander said that a country’s might was “too often measured in what \ could destroy” and that “in the 21st century, strength should be measured by what we can build together”.

In an appeal for greater use of reformed multilateralist institutions such as the United Nations and the World Bank, he said: “Just as we need the rule of law at home to have civilisation, so we need rules abroad to ensure global civilisation.”

Much of Mr Alexander’s speech, the first made abroad by a Cabinet member since Tony Blair’s departure, was devoted to expressing admiration for the US. “There are few global challenges that do not require the active engagement of the United States,” he said, before calling on it to adopt new policies, alliances and priorities that “do not just protect us from the world — but reach out to the world”. Destructive power is no measure of a country's might, Britain tells US (more) By Tom Baldwin in Washington

THE TELEGRAPH:
Brown ally hints at new UK relations with US (more) By Graeme Wilson

Mark Alexander
Mad, Mad Brown!

DAILY EXPRESS: GORDON Brown’s politically correct onslaught intensifed last night as compulsory teaching of the life of Sir Winston Churchill was dropped.

A new school curriculum, unveiled as part of the Prime Minister’s barrage of initiatives, also scrapped the mandatory study of dictators Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin. It was instantly branded “madness” by critics.

Instead, secondary school pupils will be taught classes in global warming, healthy eating, Arabic and Urdu. And they will get five-minute “attention-grabbing” lessons in subjects like French and mental arithmetic following claims that today’s youngsters cannot concentrate for long. The Madness of Brown (more) By Marcer Hall

Mark Alexander
For Gawd’s Sake, Gawden, Give Our Children a Good Start in Life! Give Our Children a Proper Education, Not a Mish-Mash of Trendy Subjects

THE TELEGRAPH: It is always attractive when someone dismantles a dictatorship. The National Curriculum was a dictatorship. The Government's announcement that up to 25 per cent more flexibility and choice will be built in to it is, on balance, a change in principle to be welcomed. The same curriculum that works for a school in a leafy suburb is not always suited to a school in a run-down estate in an area of urban blight. It makes sense to define a core of learning while at the same time make the curriculum capable of adapting to different or local circumstances.

What the changes do nothing to recognise or to remedy is the fact that secondary education is in deep crisis. Initiative after initiative has been bolted on over the years so that our educational system resembles a lumbering Soyuz space station to which people have been adding modules since the dawn of space exploration.

There are 18 different types of maintained secondary school designated in Britain, a laughable dog's dinner replicated nowhere else in the world. Physics teachers are an extinct species, chemistry and modern languages teachers heading the same way. Only 40 per cent of maths teachers hold a degree in maths or equivalent. Curriculum reforms miss the point (more) By Martin Stephen

Mark Alexander
We Are Not Pulling Together to Defeat Our Common Enemy. Our American Friends Are Being Marginalized and Sidelined

THE TELEGRAPH: In the West's battle against the malign forces of Islamic extremism, no countries are more important than Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. This is where al-Qa'eda and its affiliates have their bases, and this is where, as the recent failed terror attacks in Britain have shown, impressionable young Muslims are mostly radicalised and trained in their evil art.

And yet in each case those responsible for prosecuting the campaign against militant Islam - primarily America and Britain - could be forgiven for feeling they are not getting the support they need from countries that are supposed to be their key allies. With allies like these, who needs enemies? (more) By Con Coughlin

FINANCIAL TIMES:
Bush conceded US ‘tired of war’ By Demetri Sevastopulo and Andrew Ward in Washington, and Steve Negus, Iraq correspondent

Mark Alexander
Integration of Turks into German Society High on the Agenda

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Four groups representing Germany's Turkish population have refused to take part in Angela Merkel's integration summit being held Thursday. German commentators are divided over whether the groups have a point or whether they are just proving that Turks in Germany don't want to integrate.

The boycott by four major organizations representing the Turkish community in Germany of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's much-vaunted integration summit (more...) threatened to overshadow the event as it took shape on Thursday.

Their main bone of contention is a new immigration law which contains measures they consider discriminatory -- for example, a stipulation that future spouses can only come to Germany if they can prove knowledge of German, a rule that does not apply to Americans, Japanese or European Union citizens and seems to have been created with Turks in mind. "That is discrimination," said Kenan Kolat, chairman of the Turkish Community in Germany (TGD) organization.

He announced Wednesday that his group would not be taking part in the summit. "We have determined that it makes no sense to participate because the government has not understood the seriousness of our concerns and doesn't appear to be willing to seriously discuss possible changes to the immigration law," Kolat told SPIEGEL ONLINE. Three other major Turkish organizations also said they were boycotting the summit -- which will still go ahead as planned.

The refusal to participate was criticized in some quarters. "You don't solve problems by staying away, but rather by speaking to each other," commented Maria Böhmer, Merkel's commissioner for integration. Observers suggested that the federations had shot themselves in the foot by refusing to participate, and that they were lending weight to the view that immigrants do not want to integrate. Immigration Law 'Hits Turks Below the Belt' (more)

Mark Alexander
Das Repräsentantenhaus stimmt für den Beginn des Abzugs aus Irak

NZZ ONLINE: Das von den Demokraten beherrschte Repräsentantenhaus hat am Donnerstag für den Beginn des Abzugs der amerikanischen Truppen aus dem Irak innerhalb von 120 Tagen gestimmt. Der Beschluss fiel ungeachtet einer Vetodrohung von Präsident Bush mit 223 gegen 201 Stimmen.

(sda/rtd) Ungeachtet der Androhung des Vetos von Präsident Bush hat das amerikanische Repräsentantenhaus am Donnerstag erneut einen Zeitplan für den Truppenabzug aus dem Irak beschlossen. Es verabschiedete eine entsprechende Vorlage mit 223 zu 201 Stimmen. US-Repräsentantenhaus beschliesst erneut Irak-Abzugsplan: Bush droht mit Veto (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Dax so hoch wie noch nie

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: 13. Juli 2007 Nach sieben Jahren und drei Monaten ist es wieder soweit. Im Verlauf des Freitaghandels hat der Deutsche Aktienindex Dax ein Rekordhoch erreicht und damit die Rekordmarke aus dem März des Jahres 2000, dem Gipfel der Technologieblase, übertroffen.

Um exakt 9.08 und 57 Sekunden Uhr markierte der Index mit 8.151,57 Punkten seinen bisher höchsten Stand, fiel danach allerdings wieder etwas zurück. Im weiteren Verlauf hielt sich der Leitindex der deutschen Aktienmärkte jedoch über der Marke von 8.000 Punkten. Dax auf Allzeithoch (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Cécilia Sarkozy à Tripoli

LE FIGARO: "on peut être raisonnablement optimiste" assure l'Élysée au lendemain du voyage surprise en Libye de la première dame de France.

EN JUIN dernier, Cécilia Sarkozy ne cachait plus son intention de jouer un rôle diplomatique « complémentaire » de celui du président de la République, à l'image d'une « first lady » aux États-Unis. La première dame de France semble avoir trouvé dans la crise des infirmières bulgares, condamnées à mort par la justice libyenne, l'occasion de donner la mesure du rôle qu'elle entend jouer sur la scène politique internationale.

L'épouse du président français était hier à Tripoli pour une visite surprise, au cours de laquelle elle a rendu visite aux cinq infirmières, emprisonnées depuis huit ans et condamnées à mort pour avoir inoculé le virus du sida à plus de 400 enfants libyens. Elle a ensuite quitté Tripoli pour se rendre à Benghazi (1 000 km à l'est de la capitale) afin de rencontrer les enfants contaminés et leurs familles.

Interrogé sur ce voyage, le chef de l'État français précisait dans l'après-midi d'hier, en arrivant à la mairie d'Épinal pour « une grande réunion républicaine » sur les institutions françaises, que son épouse aurait dans la soirée une « nouvelle rencontre avec le colonel Mouammar Kadhafi », le numéro un libyen qui l'avait accueillie le matin.

L'intéressée a précisé que sa visite en Libye n'était « pas officielle » et qu'elle a été envoyée par le président français « en tant que mère » pour exprimer le soutien de la France aux enfants, a affirmé le porte-parole des familles, Idriss Lagha. « La rencontre a été très chaleureuse », a indiqué ce dernier, ajoutant que Mme Sarkozy avait promis un appui médical et des facilités pour l'obtention de visa pour les familles qui désirent soigner leurs enfants en France. Cécilia Sarkozy auprès des infirmières bulgares (suivant)

Mark Alexander
« Ces dernières semaines, près de 150 000 Iraniennes ont été interpellées à cause de leurs foulards jugés insuffisamment stricts »

LE FIGARO: Arrestation d'étudiants, de syndicalistes et de binationaux, poursuites contre les militantes féministes, intimidation d'opposants et de journalistes : le régime de Téhéran, sous pression internationale à cause de son programme nucléaire, durcit le ton en interne.

DANS la salle de rédaction de ce journal local, on entend voler les mouches. Sous le poids des nouvelles restrictions imposées ces derniers mois, les plumes n'ont plus grand-chose à gratter. « À l'exception de la retranscription des discours du guide suprême et des déclarations du président Ahmadinejad, écrire est devenu une prise de risque incontrôlable », se lamente un jeune reporter, qui préfère taire son nom.

Interdiction d'évoquer les sanctions onusiennes, interdiction de parler des arrestations menées par la police des moeurs, interdiction d'écrire sur les pressions subies par la minorité sunnite... Une circulaire de trois pages, envoyée par le Conseil suprême de la sécurité nationale il y a un mois aux rédactions des quotidiens iraniens, dresse une liste exhaustive des sujets à éviter. Ceux qui dérogent à la règle sont régulièrement intimidés, parfois arrêtés, voire forcés de mettre la clef sous la porte.

Derniers exemples en date : la fermeture forcée, à une semaine d'intervalle, du quotidien réformateur Hamihan et de l'agence de presse semi-officielle Ilna, proche des modérés... Des signes, parmi tant d'autres, de la vague de répression qui secoue la société iranienne, à l'heure où les autorités de Téhéran font l'objet d'une pression internationale renforcée à cause de leur refus d'abandonner leur programme nucléaire. Le régime iranien étouffe toute contestation (suivant) De Delphine Minoui

Mark Alexander

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Jane Felix-Browne – Zaina Mohamad – the New Mrs Omar Ossama bin Laden: Latest Member of the Harem

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Photo of ‘Mrs Omar Ossama bin Laden’ courtesy of the Daily Mail
DAILY MAIL: She's a surgically enhanced "Lady" from Cheshire whose toyboy sixth husband is the son of the world's most wanted man.

She drives a white Jaguar with exotic plates, sports a face and body which owe their lingering youth to the plastic surgeon's knife, affects an aristocratic title and has been married as many times as Henry VIII.

So far, so very Cheshire Set, you might say.

But what indisputably distinguishes "Lady" Jane Felix-Browne from the other haute coutured and perma-tanned matrons of the Manchester stockbroker belt is that her new father-in-law is Osama Bin Laden.

Yes, that Osama Bin Laden. During a holiday to Egypt last year the 51-year-old grandmother met a Saudi scrap metal dealer called Omar, who just happens to be a son of the world's most wanted man.

After a whirlwind courtship they married in April in Islamic ceremonies in Cairo and Saudi Arabia, where the groom, a youth of saturnine good looks, is based.

Mrs Felix-Browne, now back home in Cheshire, wants to get her husband a visa to visit this country. She hopes Omar will spend six months here and six months in Saudi.

But she conceded: "Because my husband's name is Bin Laden he finds it very difficult to travel anywhere. He rarely leaves Saudi Arabia because of the problems he runs into at airports.

"He would like to spend quite a bit of time here. There's no reason why he should not come here to live, but I don't think he would like the weather."

She added: "I married the man I met and fell in love with - to me he is just Omar. He is the most beautiful person I have ever met. Meet the British Mrs Bin Laden (more)

Mark Alexander
Jane Felix-Browne Talks About Her Husband, Omar Ossama bin Laden

WATCH BBC VIDEO HERE

Mark Alexander
Pakistaner vom Kaida zum Aufstand gegen Musharraf aufgerufen

NZZ ONLINE: Das Terrornetzwerk al-Kaida hat die Pakistaner in einer im Internet verbreiteten Botschaft zum Widerstand gegen den pakistanischen Präsidenten Musharraf aufgerufen. Dieser hatte die Rote Moschee in der Hauptstadt Islamabad stürmen lassen, in der sich muslimische Extremisten verschanzt hatten.

(sda) Nach dem Sturm der pakistanischen Armee auf die Rote Moschee in Islamabad hat das Terrornetzwerk al-Kaida zum Aufstand gegen Pakistans Präsident Pervez Musharraf aufgerufen. “Wenn ihr euch nicht wehrt, wird Musharraf euch vernichten“, sagte die Nummer 2 der Terrororganiation, Aiman az-Zawahri. Al-Kaida ruft Pakistaner zum Aufstand gegen Musharraf auf: Internetbotschaft der Nummer 2 des Terrornetzwerks (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Libye: « Les infirmières bulgares peuvent espérer une future extradition »

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Photo grâce au Figaro
LE FIGARO: Malgré la confirmation hier de leur condamnation à mort, les infirmières bulgares peuvent espérer une future extradition.

LA JUSTICE et la diplomatie continuent leur cheminement parallèle. Tandis que la Cour suprême libyenne confirmait hier les peines de mort pour les cinq infirmières bulgares et le médecin d'origine palestinienne coupables, à ses yeux, d'avoir inoculé le virus du sida à plus de 400 enfants de l'hôpital de Benghazi, la Fondation Kadhafi, présidée par le fils du guide de la révolution, annonçait qu'un « compromis acceptable » avait pu être trouvé avec les familles des enfants contaminés. Celles-ci recevraient des compensations financières par le fonds spécial d'aide aux victimes créé en 2005 par Tripoli et Sofia, sous l'égide de l'Union européenne. Un tel accord pourrait inciter le Conseil supérieur des instances judiciaires libyennes, qui doit se réunir lundi, si ce n'est à annuler, au moins à commuer les peines capitales prononcées en peines de prison. Les infirmières bulgares s'en remettent aux politiques (suivant) De Christine Fauvet-Mycia

Mark Alexander
Al-Qaida frappe à nouveau en Algérie

LE FIGARO: Un kamikaze a tué dix militaires dans un attentat contre une caserne de l'armée algérienne à Lakhdaria.

LES MÉTHODES d'al-Qaida se pérennisent en Algérie. Trois mois jour pour jour après les sanglants attentats d'Alger (30 morts et plus de 200 blessés), les islamistes armés ont à nouveau utilisé l'arme de l'attentat suicide. Un kamikaze a jeté hier à vive allure un camion frigorifique chargé d'explosifs contre une caserne de l'armée à Lakhdaria, une ville située à une centaine de kilomètres au sud-est d'Alger, au lendemain de la visite du président Nicolas Sarkozy.

L'attaque s'est soldée par dix militaires tués et trente-cinq blessés. Le chauffeur du véhicule piégé, un « martyr » âgé d'une vingtaine d'années, est passé à l'action alors qu'Alger, la capitale, était placée sous haute surveillance pour cause d'ouverture des 9e Jeux africains, la première grande manifestation sportive organisée dans le pays depuis le retour à la paix civile à la fin des années quatre-vingt-dix. Des milliers de policiers sont disposés autour des sites de compétition et les villages d'athlètes regroupant 8 000 participants. Al-Qaida frappe à nouveau en Algérie (suivant) De Thierry Oberlé

Mark Alexander
Adulterer Is Stoned to Death in Iran

KUWAIT TIMES: TEHRAN: Iran said yesterday that a man convicted of adultery had been stoned to death, the first time it has confirmed such an execution in five years, drawing international condemnation. The punishment - which involves the public hurling stones at the convict buried up to his waist - was meted out despite a 2002 directive from the head of the country's judiciary suspending the practice. "This case has been recently executed in the village that was mentioned," judiciary spokesman Alireza Jamshidi told reporters about the stoning of Jafar Kiani in Aghche Kand near Takestan, in Qazvin province. Iran ‘adulterer’ stones to death (more)

Mark Alexander
Outrage in Bahrain as Iran Claims the Gulf Archipelago Is Really an Iranian Province

KUWAIT TIMES: MANAMA: Bahrain's press condemned yesterday claims by a hardline Iranian newspaper that the Shiite-majority Gulf archipelago is an Iranian province which should be returned to the Islamic republic. "Such claims represent an outrageous interference in the affairs of an independent and sovereign state," said the Al-Ayyam daily in response to comments by Hossein Shariatmadari, managing director of Iran's Kayhan newspaper, who is appointed by the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Bahraini press outraged by Iran territorial claims (more)

Mark Alexander
Kuwait Parliament Committee Calls for Revaluation of the Kuwaiti Dinar

KUWAIT TIMES: KUWAIT: A Kuwait parliament committee urged the government to allow the dinar currency to reflect the real value of the US dollar, which is at record lows against the euro, state news agency KUNA reported yesterday. "On the foreign exchange market the government is (asked) to review the exchange rate of the US dollar in the light of the actual prices on the market...," KUNA quoted budget committee recommendations as saying.

Kuwait abandoned its peg to the dollar in May, allowing the currency of the world's seventh largest oil exporter to appreciate 0.37 percent. The central bank said at the time it wanted to contain the impact of the dollar's slide on imports, which were driving up inflation. Analysts including those at Deutsche Bank and Standard Chartered expect Kuwait to move again this year especially if the dollar's slide continues.

The dollar slipped for a second session yesterday, hitting a fresh low against the euro, a 26-year low against sterling and a one-month trough against the yen. The parliamentary committee made the comments as part of a package of recommendations which parliament adopted as it approved the 2007/08 state budget. Standard Chartered said in June Kuwait was likely to let its dinar rise a further 0.35 percent against the dollar in 2007. Dinar revaluation urged (more)

Mark Alexander
Iranian Carpenter Arrested for Opium Trade

KUWAIT TIMES: KUWAIT: Following the seizure of drugs hidden inside some olives and seizing another 25 kg of heroin inside radishes in the UAE, Kuwait's Drug Control General department (DCGD) detectives managed to seize opium hidden inside some nut shells, said informed sources. The sources noted that the DCGD, under commandership of Brig Sheikh Ahmed Al-Khalifa, had been tipped off about the activity of an Iranian carpenter in Jahra who had been selling opium which he managed to smuggle in a while ago through the airport despite undergoing very thorough inspections. A special team consisting of Lt Khaled Gholoum and Lt Ali Adullah was assigned to the mission and managed to make a deal with the suspect to buy some opium for KD 50. The suspect was arrested red-handed on delivery and a further quarter kilo of the drug was found at his house. A case was filed and further investigations are still in progress. Iranian carpenter arrested in Jahra for opium trade (more) By Hanan Al-Sa'doun

Mark Alexander
Oh Gawden! Now You’ve Gone and Done It: ‘President’ Brown Casts Aside 150 Years of Protocol

DAILY EXPRESS: GORDON Brown outraged traditionalists yesterday by delivering his own version of the Queen’s Speech.

The Prime Minister cast aside more than 150 years of Parliamentary protocol to announce his Government’s plans for the next 18 months in the House of Commons.

In true presidential style, he unveiled 23 proposed Government Bills, including a pledge to build three million houses in an attempt to ease the shortage of affordable homes.

Many MPs were astonished by his decision to usurp the Queen’s annual visit to Westminster for the State Opening of Parliament in November.

In the past, the contents of the Queen’s Speech have officially remained secret until delivered by the Monarch in the House of Lords. ’President’ Brown Snubs the Queen (more)

Mark Alexander
British Passports Dished Out Like Confetti

DAILY MAIL: More than a million British passports have been issued to immigrants over the past decade according to new Government figures.

The 1,020,510 total - an average of 102,000 every year - means an immigrant is granted British citizenship every five minutes.

That equates to 12 people being approved for citizenship every hour, the Conservatives said, based on staff working round the clock.

In addition, the number of applications approved in 2006, 154,000, was almost four times higher than in the last full year of Tory rule in 1996.

The research will reignite demands for tougher rules and for citizenship to be a "privilege not a right".

Under current rules, even heinous criminals - including murderers and rapists - can be approved for a passport if they wait for a "clear period" before applying. Another foreigner gets a UK passport every five minutes (more) By James Slack

Mark Alexander
The New Mrs Ossama bin Laden Wants to Campaign for Peace in the Middle East!

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Photo of Mr & Mrs Omar Ossama bin Laden courtesy of the TimesOnline
TIMESONLINE: The British woman who has become the daughter-in-law of Osama bin Laden said yesterday that she hoped to use the enormous international interest in their relationship to campaign for peace in the Middle East.

Jane Felix-Browne said that she had been overwhelmed by the response after The Times revealed yesterday that she had married a son of the al-Qaeda leader.

Mrs Felix-Browne, 51, married Omar Ossama bin Laden, 27, in April after a holiday romance and is now preparing to apply for a visa so that he can visit Britain.

The grandmother and parish councillor returned to Moulton in Cheshire this month to try to formalise her marriage through the Saudi Arabian embassy in London. What I will say if I ever get a chance to meet my notorious father-in-law (more)

Mark Alexander
Operationally, Al-Qa’eda is Stronger than a Year Ago

THE TELEGRAPH: The Bush administration is to be warned today that al-Qa'eda has rebuilt its operating capability to a level not seen since 2001, it was reported last night.

A new counter-terrorism study concludes that despite nearly six years of war, bombings and other tactics aimed at crippling its capability, the group has been able to rebuild to an "extent not seen" since around the time of the September 11 attacks.

The assessment by US intelligence analysts is to be discussed at the White House today as part of a broader meeting on an upcoming National Intelligence Estimate.

A counter-terrorism official who had seen a five-page summary of the report called it a stark appraisal of the threat the organisation poses.

Al-Qa'eda is "considerably operationally stronger than a year ago" and has "regrouped to an extent not seen since 2001", the official said, paraphrasing the report's conclusions. "They are showing greater and greater ability to plan attacks in Europe and the United States." Al-Qa'eda 'has been able to rebuild' (more)

Mark Alexander
Al-Qa’eda Calls for Revenge Against Musharraf

THE TELEGRAPH: Al-Qa'eda called for revenge against President Pervez Musharraf last night following the death of scores of Islamist militants during the storming of a besieged mosque in Pakistan.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's second in command, said in an internet video that the "crime" at Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, in the centre of Islamabad, "can only be washed by repentance or blood. If you do not retaliate… Musharraf will not spare any of you.
"You must back the mujahideen in Afghanistan… the jihad in Afghanistan is the door to salvation for Afghanistan and Pakistan." Al-Qa'eda targets Musharraf after bloody siege (more) By Isambard Wilkinson in Islamabad

TIMESONLINE:
Hundreds feared killed in mosque siege

THE GUARDIAN:
21/7 bomb plotters sentenced to life as judge says they were under control of al-Qaida By Duncan Campbell

Mark Alexander
Britain Challenges the European Court of Human Rights

THE GUARDIAN: Britain launched an attempt at the European court of human rights yesterday to overturn an 11-year-old judgment by the court which bans the deportation of suspected terrorists to countries where they face a risk of torture or degrading treatment.

The government has been trying for two years to find a way of challenging the Strasbourg court's judgment in the 1996 Chahal case, which has frustrated its attempts to expel suspects to such countries as Tunisia and Algeria.

It was given permission to intervene in a case brought against the Netherlands by Mohammed Ramzy, a 22-year-old Algerian terror suspect, but that case has been held up by procedural delays.

However, yesterday the court's grand chamber of 17 judges heard Britain's arguments when it intervened in another case, brought against the Italian government by Nassim Saadi, 23, a suspected terrorist and brother of a suicide bomber. He was convicted of criminal conspiracy in Italy and given a 20-year sentence by a Tunisian military court in his absence for belonging to a terrorist organisation abroad and incitement to terrorism. UK challenges Strasbourg ban (more) By Clare Dyer and Alan Travis

Mark Alexander
Radical Muslims Might Soon Get Their Wings Clipped

THE GUARDIAN: Gordon Brown is considering introducing restrictions on offenders travelling to Pakistan and other countries in an attempt to stop radical Muslims going abroad for training by terror groups, it emerged last night.

Powers to ban those convicted of terror offences from travelling overseas on their release are to be included in a new crime and terrorism bill. But ministers acknowledge that such a measure would not have stopped Muktar Ibrahim, the 21/7 bomb plotter jailed for life yesterday, from going to Pakistan because his previous convictions were for only minor offences.

Travel to certain countries could be restricted, and those convicted of less serious crimes could be included in a ban. "We may need to go wider than just terrorist offences," Mr Brown's spokesman said. Offenders may be prohibited from travelling to Pakistan (more)

Mark Alexander
Dollar in the Doldrums

THE GUARDIAN:
· Wall Street threatened by crumbling housing market
· Pound hits its highest value in 26 years

The dollar remained under strong pressure on the foreign exchange markets last night as fresh concerns were raised about the vulnerability of Wall Street to the crumbling American housing market.

With the pound trading at its highest level against the dollar since 1981, the credit rating agency Moody's said it had placed a new $6bn (£3bn) tranche of securities backed by US mortgages under review for a possible downgrade. The move followed separate announcements by Moody's and a rival ratings agency, Standard & Poor's, on Tuesday, that put $17bn of sub-prime mortgage-backed securities on credit watch, adding to growing concerns about the health of the world's biggest economy. Dollar falls again amid growing US fears (more)


Mark Alexander
Restive Queen Refuses to Remove Her Crown for the Sassy Photographer

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Photo of the Queen courtesy of The Guardian
THE GUARDIAN: The Queen, as we know, has survived a great many hardships in her 55-year reign including war, the loss of the royal yacht and more anni horribiles than she might care to remember. But a recent encounter with the celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz was more than she could endure according to a new fly-on-the-wall documentary.

Leibovitz, famed for her celebrity portraits, was photographing the Queen for a series of official pictures to commemorate her trip to Washington in May when she inadvertently annoyed her by suggesting a more informal pose. The monarch, the queen of celebrity photography and a very royal flounce (more) By Owen Gibson

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Argumente gegen die Islamisierung Europas



Mark Alexander
Die Schweizer kapitulieren! Ein Minarett in Solothurn kann gebaut werden

NZZ ONLINE: Das Minarett in der Gemeinde Wangen bei Olten kann gebaut werden. Das Bundesgericht hat einen Entscheid des Solothurner Verwaltungsgerichts bestätigt und die Beschwerde von zwei Anwohnern abgewiesen. Die Zonenkonformität des Bauvorhabens wurde mangels Rüge nicht geprüft. Die Minarett-Gegner setzen nun auf ihre Volksinitiative.

(ap) Der türkisch-kulturelle Verein hatte das Gesuch für den Bau eines Minaretts auf dem bestehenden Gebetshaus im Januar 2005 eingereicht. Die Gemeinde Wangen bei Olten verweigerte jedoch die Bewilligung für den Bau des sechs Meter hohen runden Turms mit kreiskegelförmigem Dach und interner Treppe für Unterhaltsarbeiten im Februar letzten Jahres. Anders sah es das Bau- und Justizdepartement des Kantons Solothurn, das die Baubewilligung für die Errichtung des Minaretts im Rohbau erteilte. Offen blieben noch die farbliche Gestaltung, die Beschriftung des Minarettkranzes und die Beleuchtung des Dachs; dies sollte Gegenstand einer ergänzenden Baubewilligung werden. Minarett in Wangen kann gebaut werden: Bundesgericht gibt grünes Licht (more)

NZZ ONLINE:
Gegen das Minarett als Machtsymbol: Unterschriftensammlung für ein verfassungsmässiges Bauverbot

Lukas Reimann zur Minarett-Initiative im Tele Top



Mark Alexander
Stop Female Genital Mutilation!



Mark Alexander
Message to the Barbarians Within: Cutting that Clit(oris) is Illegal in the UK!

With many thanks to Always On Watch for bringing this to my attention:
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Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: The Metropolitan Police is offering a £20,000 reward for information which would bring to justice anyone involved in female genital mutilation.

The campaign is being launched at the start of the summer holidays, during which young girls - mainly from African communities - are thought most at risk.

Mutilation involves the partial or total removal of external female genitalia for cultural reasons.

Up to 7,000 girls in the UK are seen as at risk of this form of circumcision.

The long summer holiday is seen as the most likely time for parents to seek the procedure for their daughter as she has time to recover from what is usually a brutal ordeal before returning to school.

She can be sent abroad for the treatment, but police say they know it is also being carried out within the UK itself. Police plea on genital mutilation (more)

THE GUARDIAN:
Met’s unique £20,000 reward to stop mutilation of women

Mark Alexander
Four Jihadis Get Life in Prison for July 21 Plot

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Photos of ”the convicted men (clockwise from top left): Muktar Said Ibrahim, Yassin Omar, Hussain Osman and Ramzi Mohammed. Photograph: Metropolitan Police/PA” courtesy of The Guardian
THE GUARDIAN: The four convicted July 21 bombers were today jailed for life for an al-Qaida-led plot to murder dozens of people on London's public transport network.

Muktar Said Ibrahim, Yassin Omar, Ramzi Mohammed and Hussain Osman could not be considered for release for 40 years, judge Mr Justice Fulford QC said.

Their plan had been "a viable, indeed a very nearly successful, attempt at mass murder", he told Woolwich crown court in south-east London. Four July 21 plotters jailed for life (more)

Mark Alexander